8 October 2013
A team of South African scientists and international collaborators has discovered the first evidence of a comet entering Earth’s atmosphere and exploding, “raining down a shock-wave of fire which obliterated every life form in its path”, Johannesburg’s Wits University announced on Tuesday.
According to the university, the discovery “has not only provided the first definitive proof of a comet striking Earth, millions of years ago, but it could also help us to unlock, in the future, the secrets of the formation of our solar system”.
The research, which will be published in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters, was conducted by a collaboration of geoscientists, physicists and astronomers including lead author Professor Jan Kramers of the University of Johannesburg, Professor David Block of Wits University, Dr Marco Andreoli of the South African Nuclear Energy Corporation, and Chris Harris of the University of Cape Town.
“Comets always visit our skies – they’re these dirty snowballs of ice mixed with dust – but never before in history has material from a comet ever been found on Earth,” Block said in a statement.
Massive explosion over the Sahara
According to the researchers, the comet entered Earth’s atmosphere above Egypt about 28-million years ago. As it entered the atmosphere, it exploded, heating up the sand beneath it to a temperature of about 2 000 degrees Celsius, resulting in the formation of a huge amount of yellow silica glass which lies scattered over a 6 000 square kilometre area in the Sahara.
“A magnificent specimen of the glass, polished by ancient jewellers, is found in Tutankhamun’s brooch with its striking yellow-brown scarab,” Wits University said.
The research team’s main focus was on a mysterious black pebble found years earlier by an Egyptian geologist in the area of the silica glass.
“After conducting highly sophisticated chemical analyses on this pebble, the authors came to the inescapable conclusion that it represented the very first known hand specimen of a comet nucleus, rather than simply an unusual type of meteorite.”
Describing the moment of reaching this conclusion, Kramers said: “It’s a typical scientific euphoria when you eliminate all other options and come to the realisation of what it must be.”
Comet material highly sought after
Comet material is very elusive. Comet fragments have not been found on Earth before, except as microscopic-sized dust particles in the upper atmosphere and some carbon-rich dust in the Antarctic ice. Space agencies have spent billions to secure the smallest amounts of pristine comet matter.
“Nasa and ESA [the European Space Agency] spend billions of dollars collecting a few micrograms of comet material and bringing it back to Earth, and now we’ve got a radical new approach of studying this material, without spending billions of dollars collecting it,” Kramers said.
The impact of the comet’s explosion also produced microscopic diamonds. “Diamonds are produced from carbon-bearing material,” Kramers said. “Normally they form deep in the earth, where the pressure is high, but you can also generate very high pressure with shock. Part of the comet impacted and the shock of the impact produced the diamonds.”
The team have named the diamond-bearing pebble “Hypatia” in honour of the first well-known female mathematician, astronomer and philosopher, Hypatia of Alexandria.
The study of Hypatia has grown into an international collaborative research programme, coordinated by Andreoli, which involves a growing number of scientists drawn from a variety of disciplines. Dr Mario di Martino of Turin’s Astrophysical Observatory has led several expeditions to the desert glass area.
“Comets contain the very secrets to unlocking the formation of our solar system, and this discovery gives us an unprecedented opportunity to study comet material first hand,” said Block.
Kramers, Block and Andreoli are scheduled to reveal more details their discovery in a public lecture at Wits University (Auditorium 3, Wits Science Stadium, West Campus) at 6pm on Thursday (RSVP kelebogile.tadi@wits.ac.za).
An online version of the scientific journal article can be accessed here.
Wits University and SAinfo reporter